 | | These pieces slowly evolve in a process of designing, dismantling and reconstructing. No little scrap goes to waste. An impulsive packrat with a reputation for scavanging mysterious bits off sidewalks and beaches and foraging through strangers' photo albums, I like to think they are composed of our collective history as humans by nature of their materials. |
 | | Most of these pieces were included in my 2010 show, "Faces of Newmarket" at Ampers& Gallery, Newmarket, NH the culmination of seven erratic months of work. This project was a great joy, and I'm grateful to all my friends, old and new, who were willing to be part of it. |
 | | The paintings here represent my practice of working from life, observing the way light affects color. I like to paint everyday visual events to feel the high of being fully present in the world. I work best quickly, so that at its finest, my work is fresh and lively, a painterly realism. |
 | | These small, intimate pen drawings are a sample of only one way I draw in one medium, but I'm particularly fond of them, so I've included them here.
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 | | The paintings here represent my practice of working from life, observing the way light affects color. I like to paint everyday visual events to feel the high of being fully present in the world. I work best quickly, so that at its finest, my work is fresh and lively, a painterly realism. |
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Portsmouth, NH United States
| Lindsay currently lives in Portsmouth, NH where she settled after receiving her BFA at the University of New Hampshire. In March, her career took on a new creative twist when she took over a freelance puppetry business, including about one hundred beautifully handcrafted, life size puppets. She travels around New England, entertaining kids 3-8. What a day job! Website: www.LindsaysPuppetPals.com .
Her artistic opportunities in the past include teaching her first drawing class this spring, illustrating a children's book manuscript, working as assistant on a large scale installation piece for the Currier Museum, having painted in Italy and India, a yearlong fellowship with the UNH art gallery, and a few summers spent working as a charcoal portrait artist near her childhood home in the Lakes Region.
Last year Lindsay had her first solo show, "Faces of Newmarket" featuring portraits in oil and charcoal of fifty friends and locals. From artist's statement: "Inevitably, each time I paint someone, there... |
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